Corn - under $350.1/4 spanked almost 2 cents under and like clockwork shot out of there for a 2% return as this in value or investment type trade I like finished products here. When will fundamentalists realize game meaningless if looking to make money. I provide clients with different story coming from trading floor and seeing this business decades. Know your players. Bears out in force last week right before rug pulled again. If looking to scale 200 lots, inflation theme, call. You may have missed wrll placed falling knife lows.

Wheat-ditto, May and Mch hit long term. Notice how these rocket out of here.

Meal- look higher to sell. OLS hit in overnight along with bonds 154.14, could be good ones, Notes weaker and at apex.

Beanoil-sleeper and volatile. OSZ hit TL support this am. Brent crude ! I dont cover but feels interesting top-ish? Crude- levels hit .35c sloppy. Scalp levels aggressively, w stops on $13k rally. Sell hedge now or possibly lower later. LUMBER- this top may play like hogs and rice today. You may get one more chance.

Stocks- trade the olive lines or extremes and forget winners. Bonds-high alert to beware of off 150.10 OLB now inverse? Get a group and I will come out and explain high frequency front-running, patterns, extremes and the nasty olive. You could have it and still not make cents, of it.

Think like a skeptical trader and always use a tight stop. I believe in the lines and how they must trigger buying bulge patterns. How else would they quantify it? Thats what your up against and that is your slippage. One delayed human emotion delay and your playing their game.

I think I can help keep you out of some of that trouble. It happens fast. I know, spent 20+ reasearch.

I can give you cattle buys on this report with .50c risk say 60% of time when they are about to touch, trigger with my objective to catch vertical swan dives like wheat and corn last week that moved up 2% immediately late last week. My levels when panic & chaos algorithms (list of conditions programed) push it down to specific levels. If you miss it I have another strategy. I think these rules are a combination of what different players use. Forget fundamentals but use mathematical simple rules w risk stops. Charts on site. ------------- When markets go vertical, -------------- You need an olive line. ----------------- Or find a Broker with good out-of-favor trade ideas. How else do you think you make money? Consensus? 6-8 week one way, 10%+, run you over vertical price swings, BOZ 32.32-35.36 was an olive cha-cha.

Happy Thanksgiving

Alan Palmer

ARP

Specializing in providing timely technical advice to the AG business community.Contact me for a free outlook in your specific product.

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About the author

Alan R. Palmer, Sr., is a successful independent trader and technical analyst specializing in agricultural, financial and stock index futures. He has worked primarily in the markets traded on the CME Group.

Alan started trading at the Chicago Board of Trade in 1986 in the 30-year U.S. Treasury bond pit as a local. In 1987, he bought his full membership the day of the historic crash and moved back to his passion, trading soybeans, and grains along with bonds and stocks. Moving from pit to pit as market indicators dictated, Alan used his charting calculations to spot pivotal points as markets crossed ‘key levels.’ This acumen is Alan’s specialty and now he delivers this knowledge and experience to his customer base. He offers a macro thought process to viewing markets and players as they act with predictive behavior acumen.

He began his career in the futures industry as a summer runner while thirteen on the floor of the CBOT in 1973 delivering orders and learning the rudimentary workings of the markets. He graduated from runner to phone clerk, delivery clerk during the Hunt silver squeeze, working for various brokerage firms. After earning a Bachelor’s degree from DePaul University while working full time, he began a career as a proprietary trader with Paul Tudor Jones, a world-renown money manager, where he perfected his technical analytical techniques.

Alan has appeared on CNBC, Bloomberg, CNN, and has been quoted in The Wall Street Journal, Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times, Bloomberg and Reuters newswires. He was the founder of Nasdog.com, an independent research and charting web enterprise, based on time-tested, support and resistance calculations for predicting multi-market swings. Alan holds an undergraduate degree in Business Finance Administration from DePaul University in Chicago.

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